Poll: Perry, Romney up, Obama down

Texas Gov. Rick Perry and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney are pulling away from the GOP presidential field, according to a New York Times/CBS News poll released Friday evening.

Perry, at 23 percent, and Romney, at 16 percent, are the only two candidates with more than 10 percent support in the national poll, which was conducted from Sept. 10-15, after President Barack Obama announced his jobs proposal. Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich tied with 7 percent support.

Story Continued Below

Twelve percent of respondents said they remain undecided, and half of those surveyed said they have some reservations about their favored candidate.

Obama’s own approval rating was at 43 percent, a low for all the New York Times/CBS polls conducted during his presidency. His approval is sinking among groups like independent voters, women and people who live in suburbs.

The poll also found dissatisfaction with Congress is growing to near-universal levels. Asked if members of Congress deserve reelection, only 6 percent of people said yes, while 84 percent said it is “time for new people.” Asked if their hometown member of Congress deserves re-election, only 33 percent said yes while 57 percent said it was time for a change.

Asked if Obama has “a clear plan for creating jobs,” 43 percent said yes, while 52 percent said no. But asked if congressional Republicans have such a plan, only 24 percent said yes, while 67 percent said no.

The Times/CBS poll surveyed 1,452 people and has a margin of error of plus or minus three percentage points.